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HOLLYW0OD LIMELIGHT Man Who Eloped with Lili Damita Is Given Pirate Role By ROBBIN COONS HOLLYWOOD, Oal, Aug. 8— MACHINE! CAUGHT in a seething cauldron of intrigue and MURDER! Flynn into the Hollyweod limelight | within these past few weeks. The mnt was his elopement with Lili Damita, the second his selection as “Captain Blood” in the version of that swashbuckling novel. Flynn is Irish, 26, tall, handsome and adventurous He has written short stories and :ome verse, and now he is writing a book based on experiences. He al- ready has more of them to write about than most men. The book will tell about adventures with a riend sailing a small boat from GRANT MITCHELL GLENDA FARRELL WILLARD ROBERTSON A WARNER four years in sub-equatorial adventurous years. Lived in the “Bush” On his leg is the scar left by a poisoned arrow shot at him from ambush during one of his trips into New Guinea. The little gold chain he wears about his neck was the gift of a dying missionary whom he had nursed faithfully during the fatal attack of fever.| He spent two years in the “bush”! looking for gold. He made a small fortune when he found some, sell- ing it to a syndicate for $10,000 cash plus $40,000 in stock. The cash gave out and the syudxcnbe‘ [failed. He once owned a pearl-fishing business, and he made some money jon a small schooner he operated in | freight service between the islands. {The latter venture folded when the | [boat, uninsured, hit a hidden reef. | Olympic Boxer He was 19 when he went. to the |Olympic games at Amsterdam as a member of the, British boxing team —but most of his fighting in the new picture will be with swords |and he is learning fencing. | For several months after his ar- | | spent "um‘.\ FIRST " NAj gmu PICIURE ADDED Ballad of ° Puducan Jail ] News M!dmght l’re\ne\tlr e “WINGS in the DARK” —Coming— Friday Saturday LOUIS-CARNERA FIGHT PICTURES Last Times Tonight rival in Hollywood he was just an- other contract player. But his tests ror the Sabatini hero’s role won Lhe part in a walk. “He is the part,” they said of him. ! THEATRE D()ORS — WlNDOWS ‘ Buy direct from manufacturer and| SAVES §§ | Doors—2-6x6-6, Doors—2-8x6-6, light Windows—24x24, 2 light Cellar Sash—34x19, '3 light The old days of “shooting off the cuff” had their compensations. There was the actor who got tem- peramental midway in the shooting. He wouldn't help with the “props”| any more because his fan mail was| So they shot a scene showing him being washed up on the beach—and they just left him there, dead for the rest of the picture. one panel one panel, $2.75 1 $3.85 | growing. $1.70 | g . $ .37 Complete Millwork service. Cabinet Work. Sash, Doors. Frames. Finish | and Common Lumber. Hardware Veneer Panels. ALASKASCHGOLS T0 OPEN SEPT. 3 Karnes Leaving Next Week for Survey of District in Westward Write for our new catalog FREE MILLWORK SUPPLY CORP 2221 - Ist SOUTH . . . . . SEATTLE NEW TYPE BEER HERE! HORLUCK'S VIENNA style THRILLS THOUSANDS With schools of the Territory opening September 3, A. E. Karnes, Cemmissioner of Education, is leav- 'ng next Tuesday for a survey trip to various points in the Westward and north. He will be accompanied as far as Matanuska by Mrs. Karnes and their daughter who will enjoy a vacation at the Karnes farm at Knik. They will be joined by the Commissioner for a week after he has attended to matters in connection with opening of schools on the Matanuska coloni- zation project. Following the vaca- tion Mrs. Karnes and daughter will return to their home here while Karnes makes a swing around to |other schools. i | He plans to visit. Nome, points on the Yukon and Kuskokwim, | Cook Inlet, Kodiak and perhaps | “ome other places before returning (| te his office here. | Between 290 and 300 teachers will be employed in the Territory: this year, the Commissioner reports, and | The Clark’s Point .school on Bris- |tol Bay is reopening after being 1::lmed for several years, and schools are being started.on ‘South Naknek, Bristol Bay, Amiak on the Kusko kwim and at McKinley Park, |- . At MeGrath and Moose Pass new {scheol buildings will be. put in use | for the. . first time. (The, McGrath | s¢hool w August 1 .fli‘ earliest, of any sahiool in the ' . A |Tiew building also will be t use in | Oraig, having been built’ this sum- | mer to replace the one denroyed by \fire last winter, Complying with the law - passed |by the last Legislature, the Com-= | missioner is'preparing a course of |study on alcohol and narcotics |z FOR H.YNN1 TONIGHT is the NIGHT S@H’ E WAS APAWN. .. X o ATTHEMERCY || ‘ i v OFAPOLITICAL {Two events combined to bring Errol| new film ¢ Australia to New Guinea. He has| T T AT R ACROSS Talks dly Sphere Solution of Yesterday's Puzzle THE DAILY ALASKA EMPIRE, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1935. Daily Cross-word Puzzle 17. Steal 19. Direction to- ward which the earth Kind ot fish Dismounted turns Golf term . Be defeated Traditional tale . Worked . Chatter . Flat circular plece . Serving to re- steain . Minute particle . Biblical gare den . Peruses . Portends Dispatch Rapid . In favor of . Poses for a portrait Interpret: chalc . Bxperts Try to hear . Fly high . Acute . Finish . More fafthful ar- lle Ml\ke believe . Hotels Geological period Rodent | Vessels for heating U~ quids Proprietor Soft mineral 46. Scatter . Number . Russian river Metal Collection ot facts . Soon Musical ore ganization 3 58. Wooden pin 59, Let it stand DOwW L Labor for breath 2. Winglike 3. Any of several large sweel chetries with white flesh /2 dEEJEN JEEE JuEBC ?lllg%fllla Jump Cry of the ancient bace chanals Desire ; | Pen polnt Masculine name Negative pre- fix Horse &' Amorican In- dian 8. Shouts 9. Heated 10. Employ 11. Garden plot lll/ B Ill(/%flll.lll dNERE & Kol EEE/ @ /R e l%//// ddEEENE JENE dEE JENE JdNEE_dEE i 114 FOULOIS QUITS WASHINGTON, Aug. 8.— Major General Benjamin D. Foulois has ended the long and bitter contro- versy between the War Department and House Military Committee by retiring as Chief of the Army Air Corps e BENDER IMPROVING IN HEALTH; IS SOON TO RETURN TO JUNEAU Robert W. Bender, manager of the Empire Printing Company, was \i(iung yesterday at the home of | four new schools will be opening.|& which is now comipulsory in Alaska|& schools, . .- Alaska Distributor: NOBLES RETURN H. A. GERSTMAN Juneau Com EaAEnbhon g Mr. and Mrs.-J, Irving Noble and their children returned from Se- attle on the motorship Zapora. They. ® The same dependable :24-hour service, night or day, from @ The same old C |had enjoyed. an extended vacation |3 trip in the States. Noble is a junior structural engineer with the Bureau— = of Public Roads. e GEORGE CLARK Mrs, John W. Troy in Hollywood, laccording to a wire received by Gov. Troy from them today. Mr. Bender, | who has been in Santa Monica for several weeks, is much improved in health and will leave soon for the north Mrs. Troy, reside in the sunny climate of Cali- fornia, neau on a visit during September. -ee - EIKLAND TRAVELS Mrs. Olaf Eikland, accompanied by her son, is travelling from Ju- neau to Seattle on the motorship Zapora. Eikland operates the Ju- neau Cabinet Shop. D - DAILY EMPIRE WANT ADS PAY! MRS. NEW DOWNTOWN who is compelled to| is expected to come to Ju-| DRH ER COMEDIANSAYS 'NEED FOR AIR, LINE WITH U, S, “It's National Disgrac | You've No Route to Coo— | Coo Lmd Hl‘ ays (Continued 1rom Page One) |&f¥ Mmighty good nobody will] |admit 1 only cthing Wrong Here “President Roosevelt wants to reform business. Big business-don't! want *him to; ' So the big boys ate gaying, ‘Come on, Roosevelt, just 180 s rec from this depression and then we'll kinda be on the square | Turping Roger erious for a Rodsevelt a ccmpliment when he forecast the Chief E utive was everal | years ahead of his times” He ex-| pressed the belief that Roosevelt's !policies would be tested and found true in.a few years. “Well; folks, T just want to tell you hpw much enjoy your Al- jaska @nd your Juneau Rogers said incc usion. “As a traveling iccmmittee of one representing thel Democratic. Part my owp ticket report fo President Roosevelt abou |Alas] When he asks me, ‘Wid |what's, wrong with ’em up there?, |T'1l tell him, ‘Not a damn thing!"" FIGHT PICTURES COMING, CAPITOL | | FOR TWO NIGHTS| | +The pictur aho\&mg the reeent |Joe Louis-Primo Carnera fight will | be shown at the Capitol theatre on |Friday and Saturday. This is ac- |eording to the announcement made today. In view of the fact the col- |ored man knocked Levinsky out |last pight will undoubtedly whet the desire of local fans to see the De- troit fighter in action. e |GORST PLANE TAKES | FISHERIES BUREAU OFFICIALS ON TRIP On the first leg of an inspec- tion trip through Southeast Alaska,; Lemuel G. Wingard, Alaska Agent of the Bureau of Fisheries, made| |la tour of the Icy Straits district| |yesterday accompanied by Warden | Donald S. Haley, in the Gorst Boe- |ing flying boat piloted by Frank| | Knight Wingard left the plane at Hawk Inlet and Haley returned |to, Juneau. moment, sterling that e T A )IIIIIIIIIHIlIIIIIIIIlIIIIIIIIfllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIE NEAR BAILEY’S CAFE NOW Phone y Rates—25¢ PER OPEN lflmmn& CAR and I'm paying{ T'll go back and} Ihas a 40-45 horsepower Gray motor | coast “BUSTER” POOLE [} This Takes, the l'm\nng Right Off the (ulm VANCOUVER, s €., Aug. 8. —The Matanuska colonists are pioneering “de luxe” while old- timers are going without, com- mented Dorothy Frooks, New York City lawyer and author, | returning here from a trip to the Matanuska Valley colony project. She said she was going to Washington to lay some of her ideas on the colonization scheme before the President, then return to Alaska. She did not say what those ideas were. PLANE POST FLIES LATE AIR MODEL The Lockheed Orion-Sirius ‘low- wing plane flowh by Wiley Post typifies recent developments in air- craft des according local Ipilots The has a to 550 horsepower Wasp motor supercharger enabling the power plant to operate efficiently at high altitudes and the auto- matic controllable pitch propeller is designed for service at all alti- tudes. the plane climbs into jthinnet ‘air the pitchr of the blades becomes greater, allowing even Ispeed to be maintained PAA pilots stated that the ship |has a cruising speed of about 125 Imiles per hour. They said that the maximum speed might be 180 miles per hour and:that with wheel land- {ing gear in place of pontoons, the {plane might have a maximum spged lof more than 200 miles per hour. - BAER, LEWIS NEVER THERE Miss Frook arrived here a week ago tonight and lft again for the south last Sunday morn- igg aboygt 1 g'clock’ As far as known, the did not get any nearer the Matanuska Valley project than Dixon street, Ju- neatt, ‘Shic ‘has Some" PAA stick- ers on her baggage however, but secured them through the Ju- neau agency,’ but ‘as far as known, never left the ground except to go up in ‘the elevator in the Federal and Territorial Building. CHICAGO, 11, Aug. 8. SERVICE BOAT, A service boat built to order in New York or Chicago ac by, Woodman and Berntsen, :boat |to an announcement made builders, has been delivered to the‘dn\v. Pacific Alaska Airways. The boat | was \put in service shortly Béfore | the arrival of Wiley Pos(, and. Wnll Max Baer matched or 28 ording here to- B SEA SCOUTS The Sea Scouts Ship “Bara {will meet at Government D The new boat Is 24 feet long. 730 olelock tonight to inspect Guard cutter Ta and considerable speed—just how |Robert Hall, leader, said much has not yet been determined | Arrangements for the inspe by speed fests. It is painted in jave been made with Licut.-C striking colors, white hull and|petcher W. Brown of th orange and black cabin, to insure|japoosa. high visibility in fog or rain. The| Schilling MEET apoosa Loday the regular equipment at the PAA‘ float. 1‘ | O’'MALLEY IMPROVED St. Ann’s Hospital authorities | today report some improvement in| the condition of Henry O'Malley, | former Commissioner of Fisheries, who was taken to the hospital Sun- | day night. | boat has no name buf has "Paum‘ ‘Alaska Airways" across fhe stern. "lfungartan. The boat has become a part m Rich red. :’ / Delicate fiavor > .- SID) RETUR! ING M. H. Sides, Deputy Collector of | Customs, who has been on official | business in Prince Rupert, is re- turning to his Juneau headquarLers! abpurd the Prince George tonight. | Dave Housel, Prop. “BAILEY’S CAFE FEATURING CARSTEN'S i3 mmmmnm“mmmmmmmmmmmmnnmm I"rer;ch-itulin Dinners - RELENTLESS on her mission of h.M MERCILESS to all who stood j,, b BEAUTIFUL °rway, JOHN HALUDAY ROD LaROCOUE. Produced by John Stone ~—ADDED— Perfectly Mismated Songs That Live Madhouse Movies N('“’S TONIGHT ONLY Vital statistics show 3,805 babies | under one year of age died in Ken- tucky during 1934, GPEN ALL NIGHT Alaskan Hotel Liquor Store Phone Single Q-2 rings 24 Hour Service Merchanis’ Lunch Short Orders Regular Dinners 'WHERE YOU MEET YOUR FRIENDS" BABY BEEF-—DIAMOND € ALASKA MEAT CO. E| TC HAMS AND BACON-—-U. 8. Government Inspected GASTINEAU CAFE 'GASTINEAU HOTEL BUILD]NG INSUR Established 1898 ANCE Allen Shattuck, Inc. Junean, Alaska | L Telephone 409 B. M. FOR INSURANCE See H. R. SHEPARD & SON Behrends Bank Bldg. I WINDOW CLEAN NG PHONE 485 Private Booths Lunches Emmmmmmmm|||mn|||||m||||m|||mumuummnn||um||mm||||||m|mm|mmm|||mm CAPITOL BEER PARLORS AND BALL ROOM Dancing Every Night UL T T SHIHO R II GH T W NG R ITTE